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The Best American Short Stories 2005 (The Best American Series)
 
 
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The Best American Short Stories 2005 (The Best American Series) [Paperback]

Katrina Kenison (Editor), Michael Chabon (Editor)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 5, 2005
The Best American Series First, Best, and Best-Selling

The Best American series has been the premier annual showcase for the country's finest short fiction and nonfiction since 1915. Each volume's series editor selects notable works from hundreds of periodicals. A special guest editor, a leading writer in the field, then chooses the very best twenty or so pieces to publish. This unique system has made the Best American series the most respected -- and most popular -- of its kind.

The Best American Short Stories 2005 includes

Dennis Lehane • Tom Perrotta • Alice Munro • Edward P. Jones • Joy Williams • Joyce Carol Oates • Thomas McGuane • Kelly Link • Charles D'Ambrosio • Cory Doctorow • George Saunders • and others

Michael Chabon, guest editor, is the best-selling author of The Mysteries of Pittsburgh, Wonder Boys, A Model World, and, most recently, The Final Solution. His novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay won the Pulitzer Prize in 2000.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Chabon reaches out toward genre fiction—after all, he writes, a story's delights "all boil down to entertainment, and its suave henchman, pleasure"—but he doesn't go so far as to alienate fans of more traditional stories in the lively latest volume of this venerable series. He begins with a Little League baseball story by Tom Perotta ("The Smile on Happy Chang's Face"), arguably a character study but a rousing sports piece too, and Dennis Lehane's "Until Gwen" follows—"Your father picks you up from prison in a stolen Dodge Neon, with an 8-ball of coke in the glove compartment and a hooker named Mandy in the back seat"—to stir things up a little. Kelly Link contributes an elegant haunted house tale, and Cory Doctorow serves up a "piss-take" on Orson Scott Card's "Ender's Game" with his story of online gaming, "Anda's Game." Stories by Edward P. Jones, Tim Pratt, Charles D'Ambrosio and Tom Bissell skirt genre, too, though Chabon doesn't forget such Best American stalwarts as Alice Munro, Joy Williams, Joyce Carol Oates and newer writers in the more traditional vein. In the big pile of Best Ams, this one holds its own, even if—yawn—six of the stories come from the august New Yorker. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Chabon reaches out toward genre fiction—after all, he writes, a story's delights "all boil down to entertainment, and its suave henchman, pleasure"—but he doesn't go so far as to alienate fans of more traditional stories in the lively latest volume of this venerable series. He begins with a Little League baseball story by Tom Perotta ("The Smile on Happy Chang's Face"), arguably a character study but a rousing sports piece too, and Dennis Lehane's "Until Gwen" follows—"Your father picks you up from prison in a stolen Dodge Neon, with an 8-ball of coke in the glove compartment and a hooker named Mandy in the back seat"—to stir things up a little. Kelly Link contributes an elegant haunted house tale, and Cory Doctorow serves up a "piss-take" on Orson Scott Card's "Ender's Game" with his story of online gaming, "Anda's Game." Stories by Edward P. Jones, Tim Pratt, Charles D'Ambrosio and Tom Bissell skirt genre, too, though Chabon doesn't forget such Best American stalwarts as Alice Munro, Joy Williams, Joyce Carol Oates and newer writers in the more traditional vein. In the big pile of Best Ams, this one holds its own, even if—yawn—six of the stories come from the august New Yorker. (Publishers Weekly )

Product Details

  • Paperback: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books; First Printing edition (October 5, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618427058
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618427055
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #234,479 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
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38 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Strong Outing Deserving of the Title, October 1, 2005
This review is from: The Best American Short Stories 2005 (The Best American Series) (Paperback)
Of course no "best" list will ever have all or many of a reader's favorites as no editor can please everyone. But the Best American series continues to be consistent. My only complaint is the policy to exclude people of other nationalities whose stories are published in American magazines. Where the story is published, not the writer's nationality, should be the criteria. For example, my favorte short story writer, Haruki Murakami, who is frequently published in the New Yorker, is excluded. To add insult to injury, the policy is arbitrary so that Canadian writer Alice Munro (one of my favorites, no disrespect toward her) is included.

In any event, here are some highlights:

1. The Smile on Happy Chang's Face by Tom Perrotta. Vintage Perrotta fiction of adult children who are playing house while suffering from their infantile ways. The story could have been swiped from the pages of Perrotta's masterpiece novel The Little Children. Here a divorced husband who rejected his gay teenage son tries to resolve his family conflicts while umpiring Little Leage baseball games.

2. Stone Animals by Kelly Link. One of the most original young writers around, Link writes "ghost" stories full of domestic angst such as this one about a family moving into a strange house.

3. Silence by Alice Munro. A mother grieves the separation of her daughter who decides to flee from her parents' problems by joining a cult in the Canadian wilderness. The cult is headed by an elephantine half-witted, self-aggrandizing matriarch. You will despise this woman.

4. Death Defier by Tom Bissell, an American journalist covering the Middle-East conflict becomes more and more deranged leading to the story's climax. A great story about America's role in Afghanistan and Iraq and the complexities of being a journalist over there.

5. The Girls by Joy Williams. Perhaps inspired by Flannery O'Conner's Good Country People. Two thirty-something sisters, still living with their parents, seem like in part the reincarnation of O'Conner's Hulga. Like that grotesque, these sisters are full of intellectual pride while blind to their repulsive arrested development. They mentally torture their parents' houseguests.

6. Natasha by David Bezmozgis. Perhaps one of the best stories I've read in the last seven years. A Canadian boy hosts a Russian teenage girl and discovers that she made adult films to get by in the moral wasteland of modern Russia. This is one of the most devastating loss-of-innocence stories I've ever read.

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another Great Collection, April 23, 2006
This review is from: The Best American Short Stories 2005 (The Best American Series) (Paperback)
Best American Short Stories (2005), ed. Michael Chabon (4/5)

My creative writing teacher once told me that a when a short story ends it should leave the reader with a tuning fork-like resonance. That is, it should continue ringing in your head long after you've put the story down. Michael Chabon has compiled a collection of short stories that accomplish exactly that. Long after you have finished the Best American Short Stories of 2005 I guarantee your mind will continually drift back to them. I think the reason for this resonance is because a well crafted short story is, to borrow an analogy from Hemingway, an iceberg. As a reader, we are only shown the small part of the iceberg that's visible above water, but there still remains the perplexing ninety-percent of the iceberg hiding underwater. The short story teases us with the visible ten percent while our mind continues trying to figure out the remaining ninety percent either consciously or unconsciously. To borrow another phrase from Hemingway (who in turn borrowed it from Gertrude Stein), a great short story is like a moveable feast.

It is to Michael Chabon's credit that he managed to pick out short stories that contain this resonance when his own short stories lack exactly that. I picked up Werewolves in Their Youth several years ago, and found myself disappointed. While his prose has no peers, I found Chabon's short stories suffered from an attempt to wrap up epic problems within twenty pages. From my experience, short stories solve nothing within the protagonists' lives. At most they merely suggest a future resolution. Perhaps the reason is that the short story is too small for Chabon's panorama epics to hold, and he really needs a novel to stretch out and contain his worlds. However, he recognizes a good short story when he sees it.

Let's start with two of my least favorites from the collection. First up is "Silence" by Alice Munro. Before I read this story I had heard plenty of praise about Munro and was exited to finally read something by her. Like every story in the collection the prose is well written, but there was just something missing-oh, yeah a believable protagonist in a believable situation.

The story begins as the main character, Juliet, goes to meet her daughter who recently returned from a European trip. She discovers her daughter has joined some kind of cult. What does Juliet do after discovering her daughter has abandoned her? What every mother would do, she continues to live her life, and we get to about her switches careers, her relationship with men, and every once in a while manages to find the time to think about her lost daughter.. Of course, losing a daughter seems secondary to just about everything else in her life. Like anyone, my mother has her faults, but I now find it comforting to know that at the very least she would freak out if I became some kind of weird recluse cult member. What's worse is that we never find out why Juliet's daughter left her. The question is brought up once or twice, and it's suggested that Juliet was not meeting her daughter's spiritual needs or that she let her daughter get too close to her and treated her like a friend instead of the vulnerable child she was, but ultimately we're given no definite answer. This is one of the worst cases of a writer creating a situation she has never encountered before. Sure, a really good writer can make a foreign situation seem real even though they have never truly lived through it. Usually they can find a comparable life experience and draw from that, but Munro does not manage that. Instead, the shortcomings of this story act like a black hole that sucks the rest of the narrative into it.

I didn't have as much of a problem Tom Bissell's "Death Defier," but I did feel it failed to live up to its potential. In the commentary section the author claims he came up with the idea for this short story after going to Afghanistan and observing other journalists who were unaffected by the death surrounding them. The location and scope of his story promises to bring up some interesting questions, but by the end of the story you quickly realize the author's content with breaking that promise.

The story involves two journalists, one American and one British, covering the American invasion of Afghanistan. The two of them decide to explore the country instead of staying holed up inside the fence of the American troops. The American seems absolutely callus to the events surrounding him. Is this a clever commentary on the effects of journalism or maybe some observations of an American outside of his boarders? No, it's actually a character study of some guy who became a free lance journalist after his dad died. That's right, he has become the "Death Defier!" I think I read a similar plot in a comic book, but the comic book was better written.

With these two exceptions the rest of the collection is an absolute joy. One of my favorites is "The Smile on Happy Chang's Face." This story involves a beer and sports kind of dad who must deal with having a homosexual son. He doesn't deal well, and when the story opens he is living alone after he's decked his son and his family naturally moved out. I loathe to reveal anymore, except that most of the tale concerns the protagonist acting as an umpire for a little league game. These things seem awfully disparate, but connect in some odd bit of logic. By the time I finished the story I was stretching my mind to reconcile the themes with what happened in the story. It took me some time, but it all sort of clicked together like an erector set. What is the meaning behind Happy Chang's smile?

My second favorite (I should say my current second favorite because it will almost certainly change) is Alix Ohlin's "Simple Exercises for the Beginning Student." Besides having a catchy title, there are some prose gems hidden in Ohlin's work. The story revolves around a misfit kid who begins piano lessons. The way this kid is described I imagine the smelly kid in the back of the classroom who the other misfits won't even hang out with. I mentioned earlier that I don't believe short stories should have easy solutions at the end. Well, this story one ups me, and the world seems to be in even more disarray by the end of the story. It all falls apart, like your big brother kicking over your Lincoln logs.

Several themes pop up a in The Best American Short Stories - cousins and piano lessons spring to mind - but the theme that seems most prevalent is immigrants and the diversity of America. This seems particularly relevant at this juncture in our history when streets are filling with immigrants protesting for their citizenship. Best American feels like a kaleidoscope of images representing a country that's a patchwork of immigrants. I doubt this was a conscious choice on the part of Chabon, but for me this reoccurrence only enhanced an already fine collection.

Some other stories that are still ringing in my head: Kelly Link's "Stone Animals" - a ghost story about a family that's falling apart, Joyce Carol Oates "The Cousins" - a series of letter correspondences between two lost second generation Jewish immigrants, and Thomas McGuane's "Old Friends" - a former best friend moves in with the yuppie protagonist who can't stand his former acquaintance.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Redraw the Boundaries, April 11, 2007
This review is from: The Best American Short Stories 2005 (The Best American Series) (Paperback)
As guest editor, Michael Chabon sets entertainment as the standard for good writing. Because for Chabon, entertainment is nothing less than human connection. If we derive pleasure from this connection, it is because through it we experience something real, visceral, and intellectual, albeit vicariously.

His mission, therefore, is to restore the fallen status of entertainment. To do this, he casts a wide net over water "serious" writers and readers often find too shallow. He trawls the waterways for writing that reeks of ghost stories, science fiction, detective novels, action movies, and folklore. Anything that leads to new and unusual forms. (Not surprising for the man who wrote The Mysteries of Pittsburgh.)

To avoid an exhaustive list, I'll contain myself to quick descriptions of seven stories inside.

"Until Gwen," by Denis Lehane, has the feel of a detective thriller, or film noir. It's a murder story told in the second person, with an accurate rendering of characters who have fallen so far, there's no bottom left to hit.

"Eight Pieces for the Left Hand," by J. Robert Lennon, is a series of eight folktale-like vignettes that have continuity in recurring themes.

"Death Defier," by Tom Bissell, is war story with an inescapable, catastrophic ending.

"Anda's Game," by Cory Doctorow, is almost sci-fi. It's the story of a child's online role-playing game with real-world consequences.

"The Secret Goldfish," by David Means, tells the story of the disintegration of a marriage from the perspective of the family goldfish.

"The Cousins," by Joyce Carol Oates, tells, in letter form, the story of two cousins separated by World War II and the Holocaust.

"Hart and Boot," by Tim Pratt, mythologizes the partly true, partly fictional lives of Wild West figures Pearl hart and John Boot.

Perhaps the best way to judge the quality of an anthology such as this is to measure how successful the guest editor has been in achieving the goals he or she set forth in their introduction. If that suits you, then this is a high-quality product.
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